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Amazon signs Woody Allen to create his first TV series

Frazier Moore
Published 3:30 p.m. CT Jan. 14, 2015

This Aug. 27, 2013 file photo shows director and actor Woody Allen at the French premiere of "Blue Jasmine," in Paris. Amazon Studios is delivering Woody Allen as creator of his first-ever TV series. The veteran filmmaker will write and direct all of the episodes of the half-hour series. A full season has been ordered for Amazon's Prime Instant Video, the company announced Tuesday, Jan. 13, 2015.(Photo: File/Christophe Ena/AP)

Amazon Studios is delivering Woody Allen as creator of his first-ever TV series.

The Oscar-winning filmmaker will write and direct all of the episodes of the half-hour series. A full season has been ordered for Amazon’s Prime Instant Video, the company announced this week. The series is expected to premiere in 2016.

No details on casting were disclosed, nor was the series title announced.

Amazon Studios vice president Roy Price called Allen “a visionary creator who has made some of the greatest films of all time,” keeping him “at the creative forefront of American cinema” during a career that spans 50 years.

“I don’t know how I got into this,” the 79-year-old Allen said in a wryly modest statement. “I have no ideas and I’m not sure where to begin. My guess is that Roy Price will regret this.”

Allen’s signing adds another coat of luster to Amazon Studios, a recent entrant in the world of streaming video that is redefining what “television” means. On Sunday, Amazon gained new cachet when the first season of its series “Transparent” won two Golden Globes, including best comedy series.

Allen has masterminded and often starred in more than 40 films since his maiden directorial effort, “What’s Up Tiger Lily?” in 1966. His latest movie project is “Magic in the Moonlight,” released last year, with yet another film in the pipeline for this year.

The late 1970s saw two of his most celebrated films, “Annie Hall” and “Manhattan.”

He has won four Oscars and two Golden Globes. Last year he was presented with the Golden Globes’ Cecil B. DeMille Lifetime Achievement Award.

But his skills were honed on television, where he first gained widespread notice in the early 1960s as a standup comic, and during the 1950s, when he wrote for Sid Caesar and other TV stars.

His prodigious output through the decades has also included magazine essays, books and plays. A musical adaptation of his 1994 film comedy, “Bullets Over Broadway,” ran on Broadway last year.